For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropologists and other social scientists to contest the bio-physical realism of natural scientists. If we were to understand how diverse human groups interact with their specific environments, it was not adequate simply to describe the objective features of those environments and human adaptation to them. We could explore what meanings people constructed of their environments, and indeed see how their categorical organisation of the natural world built into distinctive worldviews of human-environmental relationshipi. It seemed in effect there could be no pre-cultural human response to nature
SUMMARYThe emergent human cultures have shaped, and in turn been shaped by, local ecosystems. Yet hu...
Nepal’s impoverished mountain communities benefited after the 1950s through Swiss-style cheese-makin...
In many cases, rivers, mountains, forests, and other so-called natural entities have value for us be...
For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropolog...
For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropolog...
For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropolog...
Drawing on the ethnographic experience of the contributors, this volume explores the Cultural Models...
Drawing on the ethnographic experience of the contributors, this volume explores the Cultural Models...
The recognition of Nature and the Environment as sociocultural constructions is key to enhance a tra...
Successive policy agendas in Nepal have mobilised the notion of the natural environment through cris...
This paper describes a cross-cultural research project on the relation between how people conceptual...
Modern human-environment relations are problematic and difficult to analyse in terms of nature and c...
As an intellectual container ‘cultural ecology’ is fraught with the same conceptual and ontological ...
The most widespread model of the natural world by Northern Punjabi farmers appears to leverage a pow...
Growing out of fieldwork conducted in the forests around Ávila, a Quichua-speaking Runa village in E...
SUMMARYThe emergent human cultures have shaped, and in turn been shaped by, local ecosystems. Yet hu...
Nepal’s impoverished mountain communities benefited after the 1950s through Swiss-style cheese-makin...
In many cases, rivers, mountains, forests, and other so-called natural entities have value for us be...
For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropolog...
For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropolog...
For many decades the idea of ‘cultural model of the environment’ was a valuable tool for anthropolog...
Drawing on the ethnographic experience of the contributors, this volume explores the Cultural Models...
Drawing on the ethnographic experience of the contributors, this volume explores the Cultural Models...
The recognition of Nature and the Environment as sociocultural constructions is key to enhance a tra...
Successive policy agendas in Nepal have mobilised the notion of the natural environment through cris...
This paper describes a cross-cultural research project on the relation between how people conceptual...
Modern human-environment relations are problematic and difficult to analyse in terms of nature and c...
As an intellectual container ‘cultural ecology’ is fraught with the same conceptual and ontological ...
The most widespread model of the natural world by Northern Punjabi farmers appears to leverage a pow...
Growing out of fieldwork conducted in the forests around Ávila, a Quichua-speaking Runa village in E...
SUMMARYThe emergent human cultures have shaped, and in turn been shaped by, local ecosystems. Yet hu...
Nepal’s impoverished mountain communities benefited after the 1950s through Swiss-style cheese-makin...
In many cases, rivers, mountains, forests, and other so-called natural entities have value for us be...